Home > Web videos for a cause: using films to raise awareness, donations

Web videos for a cause: using films to raise awareness, donations

Submitted by James I Davison
On Mon, 07/06/2009

A while back, I saw this blog post[1], written by a Global Voices blogger Juliana Rincón Parra[2], highlighting storytellers using online videos to raise awareness about hunger in the Philippines. Among other videos, the blogger pointed out one film in particular, called Chicken a la Carte[3], a touching video that has been viewed thousands of times after spreading virally on the web through social media sites and email.

This got me thinking, and wondering, about how else online videos are being used to raise awareness of issues and spread word about charities and organizations. It is clear that a short film or video, if done well, can be an incredibly effective at turning an issue we’ve heard of into something much more personal and emotional. And as the Chicken a la Carte film shows, sites like YouTube[4] can facilitate a video’s rapid and widespread broadcasting to mindboggling degrees.

Another example from a site that uses web videos to spread the word about its work better than any other organization I’ve ever seen is called charity: water[5]. They do an amazing job of using evocative images and music to explain their cause and call people to action on their goal of bringing clean drinking water to people in poor countries. This background video[6] has been viewed on YouTube more than 76,000 times, and the one below uses a rock song by Beck[7] to raise awareness with a music video[8].

We wrote about another example[9] in May about a music/audio project using sounds by survivors of the Sichuan - Wenchuan earthquake to raise awareness, and some money, for Chinese victims still in need. In this case, the video[10] nicely describes a unique project.

Still, as I’ve wondered before[11], can these online projects – even if they are spread widely on the Internet – actually bring about change? How often do people who view something online and do more than just pass it along to their family and friends? Please share your thoughts, or other examples of interesting videos, in the comments below.